(no subject)

May. 21st, 2013 06:27 pm
copracat: Kirk and Spock, the older the grape, the sweeter the wine (sweet grope - lanning)
[personal profile] copracat
I think we should refer to it as STI/D.

In other news, I wish I liked Chris Pine.

Displeased

May. 20th, 2013 11:21 pm
zarhooie: Text: ow. quit it. ; Image: band aid (Random: Ow. Quit it.)
[personal profile] zarhooie
The last few days have been horrible, pain-wise. There's a weather system basically sitting on top of Sioux Falls, and I forgot my meds at home. Tonight is especially bad, to the point where sitting still for more than a few seconds makes me want to cry. So I'm writing this up, and then I will have a shot of brandy, and then I will hope that I can sleep. Somehow. Ow.

Dept. of Transportation

May. 20th, 2013 09:06 pm
tim: 2x2 grid of four stylized icons: a bus, a light rail train, a car, and a bicycle (public transportation)
[personal profile] tim
I found the following on a sticky note (an electronic one, that is) that I wrote while without wifi on a trip on the Coast Starlight sometime in the past year or so:

"This is like going to the frozen food section while stoned, but paying double for it." -- someone in the cafe car

announcement: "We're turning inland and the reason for that is to get away from some of these more unstable sand dunes." Actually, I thought the reason we were turning inland is because that's where the tracks are.

In Salinas, someone put a bunch of tires on the tracks, which "compromised" the main brake lines so the train had to sit in Salinas for a while while they fixed it. You know what I say to that? Fuck Salinas.
were_duck: black and white photo of James Tiptree Jr smoking while reading (Default)
[personal profile] were_duck
In case you haven't heard, I WILL be at WisCon. Though at this particular moment I'm considering just sleeping for the whole weekend instead :p

+ Please don't publicly connect my RL name and this handle! It's fine to let other fans to know my RL name, but I'd rather they not be online easily googled by present or future employers :p When in doubt, just ask me which to use.

+ I don't like to make plans ahead of time, but feel free to try to grab me for lobbycon etc.

+ I am on two panels--the vid panel and one on polyish relationships in SF/F. I also have some public speaking responsibilities, so you may see me being heinously awkward onstage. You'll also see me in the dealer's room a bit.

+ I am staying in the hotel this year. I'm probably not going to go out for every meal because I am poor and just had to buy a new computer. I'd be more than happy to hang out in non-restaurant situations, however, and maybe one or two meals with smallish groups.

+ If you don't have my cell and would like it, let me know and I will DM you. I prefer texts or email or tweets to being called.

+ I like hugs but I appreciate knowing they're coming--please don't sneak-attack hug me.

+ I am bad at faces, and WisCon is FULL of faces. Please just remind me if I look confused--chances are I'll remember your name/who you are and just need to have your face connected to your identity.

I think that's it! :D Ahhhhhh I am so excited to see everyone!

(no subject)

May. 20th, 2013 09:22 am
synecdochic: torso of a man wearing jeans, hands bound with belt (Default)
[personal profile] synecdochic
Mondays, every week, let's celebrate ourselves, to start the week right. Tell me what you're proud of. Tell me what you accomplished last week, something -- at least one thing -- that you can turn around and point at and say: I did this. Me. It was tough, but I did it, and I did it well, and I am proud of it, and it makes me feel good to see what I accomplished. Could be anything -- something you made, something you did, something you got through. Just take a minute and celebrate yourself. Either here, or in your journal, but somewhere.

(And if you feel uncomfortable doing this in public, I've set this entry to screen any anonymous comments, so if you want privacy, comment anonymously and I won't unscreen it. Also: yes, by all means, cheer each other on when you see something you want to give props to!)
wired: Picture of me smiling (Default)
[personal profile] wired
I want one of these recycled bike tire belts. Because they're cool, that's why.

I found them through this article about bike clothing. Which is battered in privilege like the finest of tempura. Gee, the shorts are $190, and so is the v-neck t-shirt? Are you kidding me? Just for reference, there is one picture where the female model is wearing $300 worth of clothes -- not specialized weather gear, just clothing branded bike-y ($100 Chrome hoodie, FORSOOTH). Or as I like to think of it, 1/3 of my fantasy winter commuter bike. That's not to say I don't spend money on bike clothes, that I don't think about it, that I don't see the advantages. It's just that I flat out can't afford to dress like that. I don't spend even close to that amount on work clothes. My average work outfit is a $40 sweater or blazer, $40 pants, and a $10 t-shirt. And don't even get me STARTED on the size-ism rampant in workout clothes of all types, but I am especially cranky about the bike type.

This article on the IRS screwup seems pretty reasonable. I find it interesting because I remember not so many years ago, the leadership of my church (the United Church of Christ) sweating bullets because they had come up on an audit on their tax-exempt status because they had a prominent member of the church speak at the nationwide church gathering. The speech was in 2007. The speaker was Barack Obama. Was it an occult campaign appearance? Was the ENTIRE CHURCH BODY going to lose tax-exempt status? (It all got settled when they realized he'd been booked when he was still only a senator, and he really was talking to the church qua church). Just' sayin, we really should be looking at everyone who claims tax exemption. The righteous will not be harmed.

I would love to read this hypothetical textbook. I remember spending a lot of time on pre-columbian history, but very much with a colonizer's point of view.

I want this fabric like burning. Only I need to figure out how to modify a skirt meant for LITTLE girs into something for taller people......like Kay! I certainly wouldn't be coveting a pirate-flying-fish skirt for my crotchety old self, right? Right. (Speaking of, Kay is currently two inches taller than her brother again. This is what I get for mating with a hill giant.

I don't know what I love better. This NatGeo picture, or the au courant caption.

Oh. My. God. Look what sprang from my loins. His fourth post on this blog is a grammar rant. I feel like I have bred true. And also that I want to correct a couple things in that post, and is he really putting periods at the end of all his post titles? But mostly I am just so, so proud. Verklempt even.

I liked this list of responses to reasons a person might not bike commute. THAT SAID, "I don't want to" should be a sufficient reason for you to get up off their back.

I really liked this short-short from Sherman Alexie. It is unsentimental, but awesome.
[syndicated profile] growstuff_blog_feed

Posted by Skud

As you probably know, Growstuff is in a state of soft launch right now while we implement a few more features and iron out some wrinkles before we invite the whole world to come see what we’re doing.

We’re delighted that so many people have been interested in the project so far — we’ve seen a good number of signups and lots of people using the site. If you’re not involved yet, or want to get more involved, here are some things you can do:

  1. Sign up for a Growstuff account. Just having people on the site, logging in and exploring it, helps us see how the software performs.
  2. Plant something. Tell us what you’re growing, and help build our database.
  3. Don’t see what you want to plant? Request a new crop in our forums.
  4. See what our other members have posted, and help them out if you happen to have some tips or ideas to answer their questions. You can even subscribe to the RSS feed for recent posts, if you want to keep up that way.
  5. Join our Discuss mailing list, where we are planning and discussing how to build Growstuff’s new features.
  6. Volunteer to test the software before we deploy it to the live site — see the call for customers emails on the discussion list.
  7. Interested in coding? Sign up as a coder — see the call for coders email that goes out every 2 weeks to our discussion email list. We’re looking for people of all levels of experience, and can offer mentoring/training if you’re new to developing Rails apps. We work in pairs.
  8. If you already know your way around Rails, we always need people to review our pull requests.
  9. Take an early sneak preview of our nascent API and start thinking about developing apps. (Note that the API is very much subject to change at present!)
  10. Finally and most importantly, let your friends know about Growstuff, and that we’re looking for people to get involved. Point them at the Growstuff site or at @growstufforg on Twitter.

Thanks!

tim: Tim wearing a flannel shirt, against a brick wall (Default)
[personal profile] tim
This isn't Rust-related, but I wanted to report that I spent much of this evening developing a revised version of my Ionmonkey patch to implement generator syntax changes for Harmony, and finally submitted the patch for review, after a 9-month break since the last time I worked on this.

I want to emphasize that I only worked on the syntax changes and haven't touched any related semantics changes at all. Why did it take so long? Well, mostly because I spent most of the time not working on it. When faced with urgent work on Rust (inside my comfort zone) or JavaScript work (outside my comfort zone), it's pretty obvious what I'll pick! But also, it's just hard to work on a compiler for a language that I don't know (JavaScript) that's also implemented in a language I don't know well (C++).

Anyway, for the first time in 9 months I can actually relax and wait for a review, instead of feeling like I should work on this the next time I have a free moment and enough energy for work! I'll enjoy the feeling while it lasts.

ah, technology

May. 19th, 2013 06:39 am
synecdochic: torso of a man wearing jeans, hands bound with belt (Default)
[personal profile] synecdochic
the good part of visiting the eye doctor for my first eye exam in four years (yeah, i know, i know): getting a prescription for new glasses, since according to the eye charts my vision (usually correctable to 20/15) had slipped down to about 20/30 with the current prescription.

the bad part of etc: having to wait for the lenses for the new glasses to be manufactured, since they don't keep my prescriptions in stock :D

i also got a box of contact lenses for the first time in ages; the eye doc i had as a child put me in lenses at a pretty-much-unheard-of-at-the-time age 10 or 11, since my eyes were degenerating so rapidly he thought that maybe the lenses would keep them from continuing to degrade. (and it mostly worked! my eyes kept getting bad after that, but nowhere near as quickly.) i wore contacts for about 18 or 19 years until i got too lazy to keep up with them, and i was a little afraid that having gone back to the glasses would start the downslide back up again, but nope, still correctable to 20/15, in glasses at least. (i could get better correction with the contacts if i were going to wear them more often and thus could justify spending more money on the more expensive ones that will also correct the astigmatism, but since the contacts are only going to be for occasional use, it's definitely not worth it.) although the eye doc says that i've probably only got another few years before i'll need bifocals, whee.

i'm trying the new "high definition" lenses they've developed, for the new pair of glasses. i am very interested, since i've always had refraction problems and they're supposed to be good for staring at computer screens for long periods. i will report back.

i've also finally bitten the bullet and admitted that my damn arms are not getting better from rest/ice/steroid shots/etc, so i dropped a bunch of money on technology that's hopefully going to make things better. including giving up and admitting it's time to try to work with dictation software, despite the fact that is the exact fucking opposite of how my brain works and is probably going to be a fucking nightmare. i'm hoping that just using the voice controls for things like page down when reading long documents, dictating short bursts of things, making my notes-to-self, doing a few emails, etc, will be enough to address the problem, especially when combined with the new two-piece, super-split keyboard i ordered so i can stop reaching inward to type and exaggerating the pronation and deviation, will help enough that i don't have to use the dictation software for extended bursts of composition or creative writing, since i absolutely cannot do that verbally. (i've tried before, but at least one of the meds i'm on gives me minor-but-significant verbal aphasia and that is no place to go for a good time.)

on the bright (?) side, at least the new adaptive tech means a new laptop to go with it. this one i'm using now isn't that old, not old enough to have a ton of problems running the software or whatever, but a faster laptop will help, and i'm getting a 13" MacBook Pro instead of the 15" i have now; i'm hoping the smaller, lighter laptop will help, and it will mean i can just put the two pieces of the split keyboard on either side of the laptop more easily.

(plus, i ordered the retina display model. i mean, why not, right?)
[syndicated profile] rocknerd_feed

Posted by Lev Lafayette

In my much younger days, like many others with simultaneous libertarian and socialist convictions, a gravitation towards the political side of punk rock had a certain inevitability. On one side of the big pond The Clash and Crass were the big names in this particular genre, albeit with their own significant differences in style and in substance. On the other side, there was the Dead Kennedys, who performed with music that was hard, fast, and competent and lyrics that combined the insightful and absurd. As a result, the appearance their former lead (for goodness sake’s people, patch up those differences) as part of “Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo School of Medicine” was greeted some interest, although past experiences of The Corner as a venue (e.g., the Buzzcocks, the Sisters of Mercy) did lead to some potential of concerns of the sound quality.

These concerned proved to be unnecessary. Whoever did the mixing that night did a superb job, and just to test that it wasn’t just dumb luck from where I was positioned, I traversed to different angles and places to test this welcome surprise. Satisfied with the experience, I gravitated towards the front of the audience; bespectacled, middle-aged, portly, with a pony-tail and a Hawkwind t-shirt I can only imagine the bemused look my teenaged self would have given to such a figure. The t-shirt, by the way, was not just an expression of my own somewhat diverse tastes in music, but also an act of musical solidarity – at the Hawkwind concert just over a year prior a good number of young punks turned up advocating their other band tastes.

jello

Starting with the “The Terror of Tinytown” (which really does sound like a Hawkwind song in its own right), “John Dillinger”, and “New Feudalism”, it was quite clear what sort of night it was going to be. Between songs Biafra took the opportunity to advocate and inspire on local and international political issues. Also true to expectations, there was more than a modicum of stage diving and crowd surfing, and it seemed that the band were good enough to bring along their own speciality bouncer to give people an extra shove over the edge. When Jello himself took a leap, it set an additional level of legitimacy for all-ages moshing behaviour.

The show continued with the popular “Panic Land” and “Barackstar O’Bummer”, before launching into the first classic of the evening, a cover of the Dead Kennedys hit “California Über Alles”, which was very well-performed by the band and equally well-received by the audience. This was followed by a triology of criticism of contemporary business and consumerist culture, “The Brown Lipstick Parade”, “Werewolves of Wall Street”, and “Strength Thru Shopping”. Biafra’s comments about wealth addicts who can only conceive improving their lot at the expense of others were appropriately described at this point. Following this, another Dead Kennedys song, this time “Police Truck”, which dovetailed quite well with “Three Strikes”, referencing the life imprisonment laws arising from a privatised prison system, and their potential response with “Pets Eat Their Master”.

A conclusion at this point was responded, appropriately, with audience denial, so the band returned for their first of two encores, starting of with “The Cells That Will Not Die”, referring to the immortal cells donated by Henrietta Lacks in 1951, which have provided twenty tons of a cell line. From this contemporary gothic-absurd story, the band turned to the most well-known song of Biafra’s career, “Holiday in Cambodia”. It is hard not to describe the excellence of this song; it attacks political complacency and the barbaric version of communism instituted by Pol Pot, and the music itself is of great merit, providing a superb harmonic succession in conclusion. Having positively blown the audience away, the band took a brief break only return punching again, this time with the great opening song from the Dead Kennedys first album, “Kill The Poor”, before concluding with the spirited “Shock-U-Py!” dedication to the Occupy movement.

Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo School of Medicine are a different sort of band. At the end of the show the band and their staff happily and immediately mixed with their fans. Jello’s viewpoints haven’t really changed over time; his politics remain pretty much identical to what they were in 1978, primarily because he got it right the first time. Without the desire or need to compromise his message remains unsullied, and as a mirror to the aesthetic his musical style and presentation likewise remains the same. No wonder he and his bands have enduring popularity.

killing_rose: A loon in a snowstorm, trying to catch the snowflakes. (Westchester Lagoon, Anchorage, AK) (Default)
[personal profile] killing_rose posting in [site community profile] dw_suggestions

Title:
Ability to freeze comments to an entry

Area:
entries, managing comments

Summary:
I think it'd be useful to have the ability to freeze <i>all</i> comments to an entry at once, instead of manually doing so.

Description:
Occasionally, you want to disable the ability of people to leave comments without destroying those already there, and quite frankly, going through and manually freezing each thread is a) time consuming, and b) a little annoying. If there was a way to mass-freeze all threads so that new comments couldn't be added, it'd be useful. The options to delete, screen, and unscreen en masse are already there, after all. I'd be a whole lot more likely to mass freeze all comments rather than delete them, but I have the functionality to do the latter and not the former

Poll #13464 Ability to freeze comments to an entry
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 54


This suggestion:

View Answers

Should be implemented as-is.
43 (79.6%)

Should be implemented with changes. (please comment)
2 (3.7%)

Shouldn't be implemented.
0 (0.0%)

(I have no opinion)
6 (11.1%)

(Other: please comment)
3 (5.6%)

Option for Blind Polls Until Closed

Apr. 25th, 2013 08:03 am
icelightning: XXY male bettafish, started off looking girlish (Default)
[personal profile] icelightning posting in [site community profile] dw_suggestions

Title:
Option for Blind Polls Until Closed

Area:
Polls

Summary:
Allow an option for polls to not show their results until after they're closed.

Description:
I've noticed that seeing how voting has gone so far in a poll can affect the poll outcome. It would be wonderful if a poll could be blind to everyone, or just to everyone but the creator, until the poll closes. This would be an option and not a requirement for polls.

Basically, we've found that polls that were supposed to gage a measure of change in a character to obtain a new status ended up being nothing more than popularity polls. (Yes, it's an RPG.) Even though there are suggestions in the works to improve the poll, the suggestions I can come up with still have an element of becoming a popularity poll as people can still view current results before voting themselves. Only a truly blind poll could really alleviate this issue. I'm sure other types of communities would also use this option. The rest of the poll options would stay the same, including what results would be seen, but the results still would not be shown until the poll is closed. Basically, it'd reflect how we do voting in everyday life (elections, closed ballots, etc).

That way, polls would more closely represent individuals choices and not have their opinions influenced by others. (Also, the surprise element is fun!) It wouldn't prevent users from talking amongst themselves on whom they voted on, but it'd be closer to how voting works outside of Dreamwidth.

Poll #13463 Option for Blind Polls Until Closed
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 61


This suggestion:

View Answers

Should be implemented as-is.
56 (91.8%)

Should be implemented with changes. (please comment)
1 (1.6%)

Shouldn't be implemented.
0 (0.0%)

(I have no opinion)
4 (6.6%)

(Other: please comment)
0 (0.0%)

Handling alt text with emailed images

Apr. 19th, 2013 10:25 pm
azurelunatic: cameo-like portrait of <user name="azurelunatic"> in short blue hair.  (Default)
[personal profile] azurelunatic posting in [site community profile] dw_suggestions

Title:
Handling alt text with emailed images

Area:
entries, images, post by email, accessibility

Summary:
Development (mostly Mark & Fu) intend to improve the workflow of posting images, and I'm the one tagged to post this bit for suggestions discussion. :) Specific to this discussion: adding alt text to a single image that is attached to an emailed entry. We call upon the collective creativity of the dw_suggestions community: how should it work?

Description:
The existing post-by-email optional/extra/advanced features are documented:

http://www.dreamwidth.org/manage/emailpost?mode=help&type=optional
http://www.dreamwidth.org/manage/emailpost?mode=help&type=headers

Should the alt text take the form of another "post" command at the top, like one of these two:

post-alt: image's alt text goes here
post-image: image's alt text goes here

Should it be done another way? If so, how?

Poll #13462 Handling alt text with emailed images
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 26


This suggestion:

View Answers

Should be implemented as-is.
6 (23.1%)

Should be implemented with changes. (please comment)
2 (7.7%)

Shouldn't be implemented.
0 (0.0%)

(I have no opinion)
18 (69.2%)

(Other: please comment)
0 (0.0%)

cesy: "Cesy" - An old-fashioned quill and ink (Default)
[personal profile] cesy posting in [site community profile] dw_suggestions

Title:
Send error if you try to email post from the wrong address

Area:
email posting

Summary:
Don't fail silently on email posting - show an error message somewhere with an explanation.

Description:
If you try to email a post to your journal, there is a setting that lists the email addresses that are allowed to do this. If you have multiple email addresses, and accidentally send it from one that's not one of the three on http://www.dreamwidth.org/manage/settings/?cat=mobile, it fails silently.

Instead of failing silently with no clues, you should get a notification of some sort to let you know it happened and give you a clue why. This should include appropriate caveats about telling Support or improving your security if it wasn't you that did it, and could go either to your Inbox, to your main email, or to the email you tried from, whichever is considered to be most secure.

Poll #13461 Send error if you try to email post from the wrong address
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 26


This suggestion:

View Answers

Should be implemented as-is.
12 (46.2%)

Should be implemented with changes. (please comment)
1 (3.8%)

Shouldn't be implemented.
0 (0.0%)

(I have no opinion)
13 (50.0%)

(Other: please comment)
0 (0.0%)

Set default country according to IP

Apr. 2nd, 2013 08:20 am
[personal profile] swaldman posting in [site community profile] dw_suggestions

Title:
Set default country according to IP

Area:
Shop

Summary:
When making purchases in the shop, it would be nifty if your country could be defaulted to a best guess based on IP.

Description:
It would be a minor convenience feature, and might involve quite a lot of work/hassle/complexity... but I thought I'd throw it out there in case somebody says "oh, that'd be easy actually" :-)

Drawbacks: Slowdown as the lookup is done; don't know whether this would be significant. Maybe there are some situations in which people would be offended by an incorrect guess?

Poll #13460 Set default country according to IP
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 38


This suggestion:

View Answers

Should be implemented as-is.
5 (13.2%)

Should be implemented with changes. (please comment)
1 (2.6%)

Shouldn't be implemented.
17 (44.7%)

(I have no opinion)
15 (39.5%)

(Other: please comment)
0 (0.0%)

[personal profile] swaldman posting in [site community profile] dw_suggestions

Title:
Review the countries that are at the top of the "country" dropdown in the shop

Area:
Shop

Summary:
When paying by credit card in the DW shop, one specifies one's country in a drop-down. This drop-down is alphabetically sorted except for United States, which appears at the top.

Suggestion is to review which countries appear at the top.

Description:
It is fairly common for such dropdowns to promote a few most-common countries out of their alphabetical order and put them at the top of the list.

The Dreamwidth Shop does this with United States.

My suggestion is to review which countries appear at the top in this way: are there others that hold a sufficiently large proportion of the DW paid userbase to merit this treatment? I suggest that 3-5 of the most common countries should appear here, and that a separator should then be inserted in the list to make it clearer what is going on.

Poll #13459 Review the countries that are at the top of the "country" dropdown in the shop
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 40


This suggestion:

View Answers

Should be implemented as-is.
21 (52.5%)

Should be implemented with changes. (please comment)
0 (0.0%)

Shouldn't be implemented.
4 (10.0%)

(I have no opinion)
14 (35.0%)

(Other: please comment)
1 (2.5%)

last of this weekend list

May. 19th, 2013 01:12 pm
montjoye: (Default)
[personal profile] montjoye

Whew. A mostly domestic weekend. I've done all the urgent stuff on my list, including vastly more house cleaning than I usually do and  another go-round with the car tail lights. Yay.


Catch that basil!
The weather has been cold enough that the basil was starting to go. So I've just turned 2 litres of loosely packed tasty leaves into shortcut pesto to put in the freezer for winter. I just blend it up with salt and olive oil. This time I've used a pot of cream to take up the bits sticking to all the implements- that will go over a chicken I plan to cook later. Yummy efficiency.

. .

Jonquil rescue
Amongst the other garden chores, I planted out the jonquil bulbs that I had forgotten about from last year. They were valiantly trying to grow all crowded in the pot I had bought them in. I thought it was just an empty pot, surprise! I do hope they forgive me for disturbing them after they started growing.

Apple rhubarb crumble

May. 18th, 2013 06:38 pm
badgerbag: (Default)
[personal profile] badgerbag
I made a up nice recipe! It is green apple rhubarb crumble and is gluten free.

- crumble stuff is brown sugar, butter, oats, tapioca flour, coconut flour
- 4 green apples, maybe 8 stalks rhubarb, brown sugar, tapioca flour, cinnamon, ginger, honey

I sauteed the rhubarb for a few minutes to see if it was very juicy, but it wasn't. Threw a spoonful of honey in there and about as much ginger as my thumb. Then mixed it with the apples and sprinkled some sugar, cinnamon, and tapioca flour on it all figuring that would thicken the juicy inside.

Mash the brown sugar into the butter, then mix in the oats and various kinds of flour.

I cooked it maybe 40 minutes at 375. It is perfect! The ginger really makes it. If I could have found the cardamom I would have put a pinch into the apple/rhubarb filling. This much stuff filled a 9 inch square glass pan.

Gluten free stuff is for Zond7 who is trying this out and seems to be doing better on it. Hard to stick to. Next I will try making gf cornbread again and then gf mac and cheese with brown rice pasta.

Day of domesticity and naps - I put up a lot of hooks and brackets and did a lot of laundry. A. continues excitedly doing things to create a Paradise for Birds. At 7am she was up asking me for "chores -- chores that might be like watering the garden or filling the bird feeders." OK! Chores! 7am! hop to it, kid! Over the course of the day she helped me drill holes, screw screws, and oil the patio benches with teak oil.

She duct taped a yogurt container up on top of the highest fence for crows. Her rambly singing has switched between lullabies and fake crow calls all day. Moomin did some homework (but has WAY MORE) everyone but me played a board game called zooloretto and A.'s friend from school came over.

Zond7 slept off his jet lag. I also did some worky things over the day when I was resting my ankles and not asleep. We're hoping to see the star trek movie tomorrow!

So lovely to have more energy, be able to walk around today, etc. and use my hands so much for things like drilling, screwdrivers, laundry, and carrying things. It may not feel very good tomorrow. And yet Enbrel <3 <3 <3 <3

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